badge_bust_247.JPG Gang takforce members arrest a young man in the Tenderloin for selling crack on the streets. They are taking him to an unmarked car nearby. Members of the SFPD Gang Taskforce blanket the Tenderloin district Wednesday night using a decoy officer to buy drugs. The results are several arrests for dealing marijuana, and crack cocaine. {By Brant Ward/San Francisco Chronicle}9/19/07 Ran on: 09-24-2007 Sgt. Mike Browne (with clipboard) and other members of the Gang Task Force arrest a suspect. Ran on: 08-22-2010 Nearly 750,000 drug arrests in 2008 in the United States were for marijuana possession -- not sales or trafficking. Ran on: 08-22-2010 Nearly 750,000 drug arrests in 2008 in the United States were for marijuana possession -- not sales or trafficking. less badge_bust_247.JPG Gang takforce members arrest a young man in the Tenderloin for selling crack on the streets. They are taking him to an unmarked car nearby. Members of the SFPD Gang Taskforce blanket the ... more Photo: Brant Ward, The Chronicle 2007 Photo: Brant Ward, The Chronicle 2007 Image 1 of / 1 Caption Close Presidential pardons, not just for low-level offenders anymore 1 / 1 Back to Gallery

You don’t see many Californians when you look at lists of federal inmates whose sentences President Obama has commuted. The reason is simple: The mandatory minimum sentencing system effectively has allowed federal prosecutors to choose defendants’ sentences by deciding how to charge them. U.S. attorneys in California have been less heavy-handed than prosecutors in other states.

The feds sometimes can choose whether to charge buyers and sellers for dealing crack cocaine when it’s still powder — crack commands a longer sentence. Prosecutors can charge defendants for quantities that higher-ups trafficked. They can include past convictions to lengthen a sentence. Or not. Thus, when a jury convicts a drug offender, the charges have already determined the sentence.

On Tuesday, the Obama administration granted presidential commutations to 111 federal inmates — including Oakland’s Darryl Lamar Reed, a.k.a. “Lil D.” So Reed stands out as the rare Californian to win a commutation, as well as an exception to the criteria for Obama’s 2014 Clemency Initiative. Then-Deputy U.S. Attorney General James M. Cole explained that inmates applying for a sentence reduction should be “nonviolent, low-level offenders without significant ties to large-scale criminal organizations, gangs or cartels.”

Former Alameda County prosecutor Russ Giuntini was appalled to see Reed’s name on a commutation list. “This is not a guy that got caught up in the draconian federal sentencing guidelines,” Giuntini wrote in an email. Lil D is the kind of guy “the guidelines were made for. He headed the largest dope organization in Oakland,” which was responsible for a lot of carnage, was caught “red handed” processing some 20 kilograms of cocaine into crack — and thus landed in the federal pen.

Reed was only 20 in 1988 when police raided his apartment and found the crack, a handgun and nearly $60,000 in cash. Reed had taken over the extensive drug operation of his uncle, Felix Mitchell, the onetime kingpin who died in federal prison. Reed was no low-level grunt. The Chronicle had reported he was “the most powerful crack cocaine gang leader in the East Bay.” The feds, however, didn’t convict Reed of a violent crime. I’ll assume he did not brandish the handgun, so one can argue he was nonviolent. Nor was he convicted for firearms possession. But low level and with no significant ties to gangs? Hardly. In 2010, Reed told the Contra Costa Times he had made “millions of dollars” dealing drugs.

Reed is not the only high-level offender among the most recent commutees. Four others were convicted of “continuing criminal enterprise.” Former prosecutor-turned-defense-attorney James Lassart told me, “We only used it with the person who was heading the show.” By definition, Lassart confirmed, these inmates are not low-level offenders.

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